Nick Shirley speaks outside of Quality Learning Center in Minneapolis, Minnesota, on Tuesday. - CNN

The Trump administration, for the second time in recent weeks, is using allegations of fraud to justify increased federal law enforcement actions in Minnesota, the state with the country'slargest Somali population.

Thelatest surge in federal resources— from the FBI and Department of Homeland Security — followed the release of a widely circulated video in which 23-year-oldYouTube content creator Nick Shirleyalleges, with little evidence, to have uncovered widespread fraud at Somali-run child care centers.

The accusations are the most recent in a series of fraud scandals involving state social service programs that provided meals for needy children during the pandemic, Medicaid housing assistance and other safety nets which benefit needy families.

The alleged schemes prompted a fresh gush of fury and vitriol from the administration of President Donald Trump and state GOP leaders, who have demanded a crackdown on the waste of taxpayer dollars for social services they said were never provided.

The scandals go back nearly a decade and include allegations of fraud in the Somali community focused onFeeding Our Future, a nonprofit prosecutors said falsely claimed to provide meals to needy children during the Covid-19 pandemic. Federal charges were brought against dozens of people — most of them Somali — beginning in 2022.

Shirley's video with the newest accusations involving Somali-run child care centers was retweeted by Vice President JD Vance and former Department of Government Efficiency head Elon Musk. The US Department of Health and Human Services then announced it was freezing child care payments to the state pending a federal investigation of the allegations.

Here's a look at key figures in the highly politicized, long-running controversy involving alleged fraudulent, government-funded safety net programs in Minnesota.

Aimee Bock and Salim Said

A federal jury in March foundAimee Bock and Salim Saidguilty for their roles in a $250 million fraud scheme connected to a government-funded food program for kids.

Bock was founder and executive director of Feeding Our Future, a nonprofit that received funding from the Federal Child Nutrition Program. Said was co-owner of Safari Restaurant, which provided meals for children at the restaurant and many other food sites associated with Feeding Our Future. Beyond feeding children, prosecutors said, the defendants used proceeds from the scheme to buy real estate, luxury vehicles and pay for international travel.

An early investigation by state education officials was slowed in part by a lawsuit filed by the organization and Bock — who is not Somali — on grounds the probe was discriminatory. She later voluntarily dropped the suit after federal agents raided her home and offices.

Bock was eventuallyconvictedof seven federal charges, including bribery. She has not yet been sentenced, but a judge denied her request for a new trial. Said, who also awaits sentencing, was convicted of 20 federal charges, including bribery and money laundering.

Bock and Said each face possible sentences of more than 30 years in prison, CNN affiliateKARE reported.

The vast majority ofroughly 70 peoplecharged in the case are members of the state's Somali community, CNN has reported. Thirty-seven defendants have pleaded guilty,according to The Associated Press.Five were convictedamong a group of defendants who were tried last year, the AP reported.

Ibrahim Ali and Quality Learning Center

One subject of Shirley's viral video was the Quality Learning Center in Minneapolis. The center was featured prominently in the video, with Shirley noting "Learing" was misspelled.

In the video, posted the day after Christmas, the conservative activist and content creator is seen visiting and trying to enter several child care centers he said are not operational yet receive government funding through the state'sChild Care Assistance Program, or CCAP, for low-income families. He does not specify in the video when he visited most of the centers, which Shirley claimed are Somali-run. He told CNN he filmed the video on December 16 and made a follow-up visit later in the day.

Quality Learning Center in Minneapolis, Minnesota, on Monday. - KARE

CNN is looking into the centers identified in the video and has reached out to several of them. None of the day care center operators have been charged with fraud.

A spokesperson for Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, a Democrat, told CNN two of the centers in the video were closed. But a Minnesota Department of Children, Youth, and Families spokesperson later clarified that one — Quality Learning Center — ultimately decided to remain open,according to The Minnesota Star Tribune.

Ibrahim Ali, a manager at Quality Learning Center, said his parents own the facility. Hetold KAREon Monday that Shirley's video was recorded when the business was scheduled to be closed. A sign on the door says its operating hours are 2 p.m. to 10 p.m.

"There's no fraud going on whatsoever," Ali told KARE.

CNN, which has reached out to the center for comment, observed families dropping children off at Quality Learning Center on Tuesday.

MAGA activist Nick Shirley

Since the day after Christmas, when he posted the video purporting to show widespread fraud at federally funded day cares, Shirley has gained hundreds of thousands of followers and millions of views.

Shirley told CNN Tuesday he is "100% sure" the allegations are true. A man whose research was featured in the video told CNN he obtained all of the information from publicly available websites and that it was not given to him by Republican politicians. CNN is looking into the claims.

His video showed Shirley being escorted out of one building by police after they responded to reports he was trespassing and harassing people.

Shirley is well-known in MAGA circles and was invited to speak at the White House in October during aroundtablewith Trump.

First Assistant US Attorney Joe Thompson

Joe Thompson headed the fraud and public corruption section at the US Attorney's Office for the District of Minnesota for more than three years.

First Assistant US Attorney Joe Thompson describes a sprawling fraud investigation involving state-run programs in Minnesota at a December 18 news conference in Minneapolis. - Giovanna Dell'Orto/AP

Months before the most recent allegations, in July, the FBI raided five businesses in the Twin Cities which had allegedly committed Medicaid housing assistance fraud,according to The Minnesota Star Tribune.

Half or more of the roughly $18 billion in Medicaid funds that supported 14 Minnesota-run programs since 2018 may have been stolen due to fraud, Thompson said on December 18,according to the AP.

"The magnitude cannot be overstated," Thompson said. "What we see in Minnesota is not a handful of bad actors committing crimes. It's staggering, industrial-scale fraud."

Walz accused Thompson of essentially making up the $9 billion figure.

"You should be equally outraged about one dollar or whatever that number is, but they're using that number without the proof behind it," Walz said in a December 19 news conference,according to KARE.

Jim O'Neill, Kelly Loeffler and other Trump administration officials and supporters

Deputy Secretary of Health and Human ServicesJim O'Neillannounced the freeze on child care payments to the state of Minnesota Tuesday on X.

O'Neill demanded a state audit of the day care centers in the video and said the agency would now require justification and receipts or photo evidence for all payments to states from the department's Administration for Children and Families.

"Funds will be released only when states prove they are being spent legitimately," O'Neill said.

Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. conducts the swearing-in ceremony of Jim O'Neill as the department's Deputy Secretary in Washington, DC, in June. - Amy Rossetti/Department of Health and Human Services/File

Minnesota receives $185 million in federal child care funding for 19,000 children, according to the agency. The announcement did not specify alternate plans for families affected by the freeze.

Separately, Small Business Administration head Kelly Loefflerannouncedon X Monday that funding to Minnesota would be suspended to "investigate $430 million in suspected PPP fraud across the state." She did not say whether that investigation into the Covid-eraPaycheck Protection Programinvolved any businesses in Shirley's video.

Vice President Vance, respondingto a post on Xabout alleged fraud involving people of Somali origin, said, "they're stealing both money and political power from Minnesotans."

DHS on Monday began postingvideosshowing agents from Homeland Security Investigations entering what it called "suspected fraud sites."

The House Oversight Committee has called Minnesota state representatives to testify before the panel for aJanuary 7 hearingcentered around "fraud and misuse of federal funds" in the state.

The investigative panel run by Republican Rep. James Comer is also expected to hear testimony fromWalzand Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison in a separate hearing on February 10.

In a statement to CNN, the governor's office said it was "always happy to work with Congress, though this committee has a track record of holding circus hearings that have nothing to do with the issue at hand."

Gov. Tim Walz and other Minnesota officials

Walz, the 2024 Democratic vice presidential nominee, has pushed back on allegations his administration lacks adequate safeguards against fraud.

The governor said Tuesday the state has spent years cracking down on fraud by "referring cases to law enforcement, shutting down and auditing high-risk programs." He also asked the state legislature for more authority to take aggressive action, a spokesperson for the governor told CNN.

Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz speaks during a House Oversight Committee hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC, in June. - Kevin Lamarque/Reuters/File

A series of state audits into lax oversight of Minnesota funds were either minimized or dismissed by Walz and administration officials,CNN reported last year. Criticism of the governor's hands-off approach to accountability came amid allegations the Somali community's strong support for — and contributions to — Democrats helped shield them from scrutiny.

Minnesota Department of Children, Youth, and Families Commissioner Tikki Brown said during a Monday news conference that while the agency had "questions about some of the methods" used in Shirley's video, it does take concerns about fraud "very seriously," KAREreported.

The state is working to improve its systems and hold bad actors accountable, Minnesota state Rep. Carlie Kotyza-Witthuhn, co-chair of the Children and Families Committee, said at a news conference Wednesday. The Department of Children, Youth, and Families works closely with county partners on reports of alleged fraud, she said.

While there are legal safeguards to ensure programs are run properly, "this hasty scorched earth attack is not just wrong, it may well be illegal, and my team and I remain committed to protecting the people of Minnesota to the fullest extent of the law," Carin Mrotz, a senior adviser with the Minnesota Attorney General's office, said in a statement on behalf of Ellison, referring to the political fallout from the video's release.

Minnesota's Somali diaspora

With around 84,000 of the state's roughly 108,000 Somali Americans concentrated in the Twin Cities, the contingent has become apotent voting blocin the region. Thevast majorityof Somalis are in the US legally.

Members of the embattled Somali diaspora and their advocates have urged people to not blame an entire community for the actions of a few.

"The Somali community in the Twin Cities is overwhelmingly made up of hardworking families, small business owners, healthcare workers, students, and taxpayers who contribute every day to Minnesota's economy and civic life," Jaylani Hussein, executive director of the Council on American-Islamic Relations' Minnesota chapter, told CNN in an email.

Trump, who has led the charge against what his administration has said is a "hub of fraudulent money laundering activity" in Minnesota,announced plansin November to terminate Temporary Protected Status for Somali residents in the state. In December,ICE launched operationsin the Minneapolis-St. Paul area to specifically target undocumented Somali immigrants.

Trump has accused Somali residents of "ripping off our country and ripping apart that once-great state." He described Somalia as a country that has "no laws, no water, no military, no nothing."

Ilhan Omar, then newly elected to the US House of Representatives on the Democratic ticket, with her daughter, Ilwad, at her victory party on election night in Minneapolis, Minnesota, in November 2018. - Kerem Yucel/AFP/Getty Images

The president ended a November Cabinet meeting asserting that he does not want Somali immigrants in the US. He referred to the community and US Democratic Rep. Ilhan Omar, a Somali immigrant who represents Minnesota and a frequent target of his rhetoric, as "garbage" and said Somalis should "go back to where they came from."

Kotyza-Witthuhn, at Wednesday's news conference, said: "Instead of tearing down our Somali community and our child care centers, let's lift them up. Let's make sure that our children have safe places to learn and grow."

CNN's Zoe Sottile, Andy Rose, Holmes Lybrand, Lauren Mascarenhas, Chris Boyette, Hannah Rabinowitz, Omar Jimenez, TuAnh Dam, Rob Kuznia and Emma Tucker contributed to this report.

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Key figures in the long-running controversy over alleged fraudulent safety net programs in Minnesota

The Trump administration, for the second time in recent weeks, is using allegations of fraud to justify increased federal law enforcement a...

The teenage daughter of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un made her first known visit to a sacred family mausoleum, a step that experts saybolstered her status as her father's potential heir.

The visit, which occurred on New Year's Day on Thursday, even sparked speculation that the girl,reportedly named Kim Ju Ae and aged about 13, could be named a high-level official at the upcoming ruling Workers' Party congress.

Images carried by North Korea's state media on Friday showed Kim Ju Ae standing in the front row with her parents and deeply bowing at Pyongyang's Kumsusan Palace of the Sun in Pyongyang, where the embalmed bodies of her late grandfather and great-grandfather are on display.

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un (C), his wife Ri Sol Ju and their daughter Kim Ju Ae visit the Kumsusan Palace of the Sun to mark the new year in Pyongyang. KCNA VIA KNS/AFP via Getty Images

The palace is "a place that symbolizes legitimacy of the North Korean regime" and her visit there ahead of the Workers' Party congress is a politically orchestrated move, said Cheong Seong-Chang, deputy head of the private Sejong Institute in South Korea.

Kim Jong Un, 41, is the third generation of his family to rule North Korea since the country's foundation in 1948. He often marks key state anniversaries by visiting the Kumsusan palace and paying respect to his father Kim Jong Il and grandfather Kim Il Sung.

Cheong predicted that Kim Jong Un could give his daughter the first secretary post at the Workers' Party, the party's No. 2 job, at the congress.

Other experts say she is too young to accept such a high-profile post and might be provided with lower-level jobs.

The congress, the first of its kind in five years, is meant to establish new priorities in state policies and reshuffle officials. North Korea hasn't said when it will hold it, but South Korea's spy agency said it will likely be held either in January or February.

Since first appearing in state media in November 2022, Kim Ju Ae has accompanied her father at a slew of events including military parades and missile launches.

Kim Jong Un, his daughter Kim Ju Ae (C) and wife Ri Sol Ju (L) watch a New Year's celebration performance at the May Day Stadium in Pyongyang on December 31, 2025. KCNA VIA KNS/AFP via Getty Images North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and his daughter Kim Ju Ae stand at a hotel reception counter as they attend an inauguration ceremony for hotels in the tourist resort in Samjiyon City, North Korea, December 20, 2025. via REUTERS

In September, Kim Ju Ae took her on his visit to Beijing.During New Years' Day celebrations this week, she kissed her father on the cheek, showing their closeness.

In January 2024, South Korea's spy agency said it viewed Kim Ju Ae as her father's likely heir. Some outside experts disagree with that assessment, citing Kim Jong Un's relatively young age and the extremely male-dominated nature of North Korea's power hierarchy.

Kim Jong Un’s daughter visits family mausoleum, promoting her potential status as heir in North Korea

The teenage daughter of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un made her first known visit to a sacred family mausoleum, a step that experts saybol...
Off-duty ICE officer allegedly kills man firing gun outside apartment complex: DHS

An off-duty Immigration and Customs Enforcement officer allegedly shot and killed an armed man outside of the federal agent's Los Angeles apartment complex, according to the Department of Homeland Security.

The shooting occurred late New Year's Eve in the Northridge neighborhood, DHS said. ICE is under the supervision of DHS.

The off-duty ICE Enforcement and Removal Operations officer was in his apartment "when he heard what he suspected were multiple gunshots" at approximately 10:45 p.m. local time Wednesday, DHS spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin said in a statement.

Ohio police search for suspect after dentist, wife found murdered at home

As the suspected gunfire grew louder, the officer went outside with his ICE-authorized firearm and encountered a man "armed with what appeared to be a long rifle" upon rounding the corner of a building in the apartment complex, according to McLaughlin.

After the ICE officer identified himself as law enforcement, the individual allegedly pointed his firearm at the officer and did not put it down when ordered, McLaughlin noted.

Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images - PHOTO: An ICE officers badge is seen as federal agents patrol the halls of immigration court at the Jacob K. Javitz Federal Building on June 10, 2025 in New York City.

"When the subject refused to comply, the officer fired defensively with his service weapon at the subject to disarm him," McLaughlin said. "The subject fired at least three rounds at the officer."

The ICE officer then went back to his apartment to retrieve his ICE-issued body armor "to better protect himself against rifle rounds" and reported the shooting to the Los Angeles Police Department, according to McLaughlin.

When LAPD officers arrived, they found the shot individual, who was pronounced dead at the scene, McLaughlin noted. The ICE officer was uninjured, she said.

2 hurt in shooting involving ICE agents in Maryland: Police

Sources said it appears that the man had no connection to the ICE officer before the shooting.

ICE's Office of Professional Responsibility is coordinating with the LAPD in the ongoing investigation, McLaughlin said.

The LAPD confirmed it responded to a call of shots fired involving a federal agent, but did not release any additional details.

Authorities have not released the names of the ICE officer or deceased man.

Off-duty ICE officer allegedly kills man firing gun outside apartment complex: DHS

An off-duty Immigration and Customs Enforcement officer allegedly shot and killed an armed man outside of the federal ...
Brazil's Bolsonaro leaves hospital and returns to jail in capital Brasilia

BRASILIA, Brazil (AP) — Former Brazilian PresidentJair Bolsonaroleft a hospital in capital Brasilia on Thursday, a week after he underwent a double hernia surgery. A car took the embattled ex-leader back to the federal police headquarters where he is serving his 27-year prison sentence for leading a coup d'etat aimed at keeping him in office.

Hospital DF Star confirmed Bolsonaro was released after some other minor medical procedures after the double hernia surgery that was completed without complications.

Brazil's Supreme Court approved the release of the former president, who governed from 2019 to 2022, for the surgery.

Supreme Court JusticeAlexandre de Moraes, who sentenced Bolsonaro to prison, denied the former president's request for house arrest after he leaves the hospital.

Bolsonaro has undergone several other medical procedures since he was stabbed in the abdomen during a campaign rally in 2018.

Bolsonaro has no contact with the few other inmates at the federal police headquarters in Brasilia, where he is held and where his 12-square-meter (around 130-square-foot) room has a bed, a private bathroom, air conditioning, a television and a desk.

In December, Bolsonaro shook Brazilian politics again by appointing his eldest son, Sen. Flávio Bolsonaro, to become his political party'spresidential candidate in next year's election, challenging incumbentLuiz Inácio Lula da Silva.

Neither Flávio Bolsonaro nor former first-lady Michelle Bolsonaro made comments about the former leader returning to prison after his hospitalization.

Michelle Bolsonaro said in her social media channels that "there is a Brazil of good people which loves you and prays for you."

"We will beat the bad days," she wrote.

Bolsonaro and several of his allieswere convicted in Septemberby a panel of Supreme Court justices of attempting to overthrow Brazil's democratic system following his 2022 election defeat.

The plot included plans to kill Lula, Vice President Geraldo Alckmin and de Moraes. There was also a plan to encourage an insurrection in early 2023.

Bolsonaro was also convicted on charges that include leading an armed criminal organization and attempting the violent abolition of the democratic rule of law. He has denied any wrongdoing.

Follow the AP's coverage of Latin America and the Caribbean athttps://apnews.com/hub/latin-america

Brazil's Bolsonaro leaves hospital and returns to jail in capital Brasilia

BRASILIA, Brazil (AP) — Former Brazilian PresidentJair Bolsonaroleft a hospital in capital Brasilia on Thursday, a week a...
Coastal flooding and king tides in Northern California forecast

The new year is bringing warmer than normal temperatures across much of the U.S. including the Northern Rockies and Great Plains, whilecoastal California faces warningsfor a couple of feet of coastal flooding and storm surge through the weekend.

A strong system is forecast to arrive off California and the Pacific Northwest, bringing more heavy rain and mountain snows in the region, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Weather Prediction Center.

The strong low pressure system is approaching with unfortunate timing, just as some of the highest astronomical tides of the year arrive along the Pacific Coast through the weekend. Coastal flood advisories are in effect along parts of the south central Oregon coast and northern California, including the Bay area, the National Weather Service has warned.

The low pressure system is forecast to bring strong southerly winds, generating storm surge that will help contribute to minor to moderate coastal floodingnear shorelines and tidal waterways around San Francisco Bay,and from north of Point Reyes southward to Big Sur along the coast.

In San Francisco, high tides are forecast to be more than 2 feet above normal on Saturday and nearly that high again on the morning of Sunday, Jan. 4, thanks to the front and the alignment of the Earth, Moon and Sun.

A similar forecast for coastal flooding is in effectalong Coos Bay, Oregonand the surrounding estuaries.

<p style=From a short-lived tornado warning to flooding, Southern Californians' Christmas Eve is being shaped by the weather amid an atmospheric river that officials have warned about for days.

People sit on the roof of a building while they are stranded during floods partially submerging the surrounding area in the aftermath of torrential rains, in San Bernardino County, California, U.S. December 24, 2025 in this screengrab obtained from a social media video.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> A vehicle stands across flood waters flowing on a road after torrential rains in San Bernardino County, California, U.S. December 24, 2025 in this screengrab from a handout video. Flood waters flow as houses ad trees remain partially submerged after torrential rains in San Bernardino County, California, U.S. December 24, 2025 in this screengrab from a handout video. A helicopter flies over a flooded area after evacuating people stranded on the roof of a building in the aftermath of torrential rains, in San Bernardino County, California, U.S. December 24, 2025 in this screengrab obtained from a social media video. Flood waters flow as houses remain partially submerged after torrential rains in San Bernardino County, California, U.S. December 24, 2025 in this screengrab from a handout video. People get into a helicopter after they were stranded on the roof of a building as floods partially submerged the surrounding area in the aftermath of torrential rains, in San Bernardino County, California, U.S. December 24, 2025 in this screengrab obtained from a social media video. Cars drive through a large puddle at Cortez Street in El Rio as a major storm moved across Ventura County, Calif. on Dec. 24, 2025. A tree limb was left dangling on some wires on Orange Drive and Balboa Street in El Rio as a major storm moved across Ventura County, Calif. on Dec. 24, 2025. Cars drive through a large puddle at the intersection of Cortez Street and Ventura Boulevard in El Rio as a major storm moved across Ventura County, Calif. on Dec. 24, 2025. Steve Cruz, a Camarillo city worker, moves large chunks of a fallen tree off Santa Rosa Road after a major storm moved across Ventura County, Calif. on Dec. 24, 2025. A car drives through a flooded road on La Cienega Boulevard on Dec. 24, 2025 in Los Angeles, Calif. A major winter storm rolled into California on December 23, forcing hundreds of evacuations in burn areas while threatening flooding and travel delays through Christmas for much of the state, officials said. A Heavy rain is seen from Kenneth Hahn Park blocking the view of the city skyline on Dec.24, 2025 in Los Angeles, Calif. A major winter storm rolled into California on December 23, forcing hundreds of evacuations in burn areas while threatening flooding and travel delays through Christmas for much of the state, officials said. A Workers cut and move a tree which fell at the Westfield Topanga shopping centre in the Canoga Park area of Los Angeles, Calif. on Dec. 24, 2025. Shoppers walk through a parking lot on a rainy Christmas Eve morning at the Westfield Topanga shopping centre in the Canoga Park area of Los Angeles, Calif. on Dec. 24, 2025. A man checks the damage caused by driving through a flooded road on La Cienega Boulevard on Dec. 24, 2025 in Los Angeles, Calif. A major winter storm rolled into California on December 23, forcing hundreds of evacuations in burn areas while threatening flooding and travel delays through Christmas for much of the state, officials said. A A car drives through a flooded road on La Cienega Boulevard on Dec. 24, 2025 in Los Angeles, Calif. A major winter storm rolled into California on December 23, forcing hundreds of evacuations in burn areas while threatening flooding and travel delays through Christmas for much of the state, officials said. A Cars drive through puddles as heavy rain falls due to an atmospheric river, in an intersection in the Woodland Hills area of Los Angeles, Calif. on Dec. 24, 2025. Cars drive through puddles as heavy rain falls due to an atmospheric river, in an intersection in the Woodland Hills area of Los Angeles, Calif. on Dec. 24, 2025. City workers try to remove a tree that felt on a wall next to the Hollywood Water Reserve on Dec.24, 2025 in Los Angeles, Calif. A major winter storm rolled into California on December 23, forcing hundreds of evacuations in burn areas while threatening flooding and travel delays through Christmas for much of the state, officials said. A Leticia Serafin (R) cooks tamales with her husband Paul Fonseca, center, and friend Pedro Jimenez, who holds up his phone light, ahead of the atmospheric river storm on Dec. 23, 2025 in Altadena, Calif. The couple lost their home of 25 years in the Eaton Fire and are residing in a donated travel trailer on their property as they make plans to rebuild. They make tamales every year to distribute to family and friends on Christmas Eve, and continued the tradition this year. A flood watch will be in effect for much of the region through Christmas Eve, with evacuation warnings in place for residents near recent burn areas. Meteorologists are calling for five straight days of precipitation, with the highest rainfall totals predicted for Christmas Eve, along with heavy snow in higher elevation mountain regions.

Strong atmospheric river brings floods, snow, high winds to California

From a short-lived tornado warning to flooding,Southern Californians' Christmas Eve is being shaped by the weather amid an atmospheric riverthat officials have warned about for days.People sit on the roof of a building while they are stranded during floods partially submerging the surrounding area in the aftermath of torrential rains, in San Bernardino County, California, U.S. December 24, 2025 in this screengrab obtained from a social media video.

Severe thunderstorms are possible along the Oregon andCalifornia coasts on the weekend. From Friday night through Monday, a general 2-4 inches of rain is forecast, with locally higher amounts along the coast north of Los Angeles, AccuWeather reported on Jan. 1.

Therain could exacerbate already wet conditions in Californiafrom other recent rain. It rained on the Rose Bowl Parade on New Year's Day for the first time in years, and the Los Angeles County Fire Department reportedrescuing more than 100 peopleand one dog from flooding on Christmas Eve.

Water floods down a gutter as parade attendees wear ponchos as they walk up Colorado Blvd in the rain before the start of the 137th Rose Parade on New Years Day in Pasadena, California, on January 1, 2026.

The moisture also means snow in the Sierras, and AccuWeather reported it could lead to a long stretch of wintry conditions along the higher elevations of Interstate 80, possibly bringing several feet of snow to Donner Pass, enough to force the road to close.

Here is a detailed summary on the very wet start to the current water year through December across Southwest California.https://t.co/Q78445OgGh#CAwx#LARainpic.twitter.com/rlIP4fC1iO

— NWS Los Angeles (@NWSLosAngeles)January 1, 2026

Warmer temperatures likely in Central U.S.

Far to the east, a warming trend could bring temperatures that range from 15-30 degrees above normal in the Plains, the weather service said.

Further east, more heavy lake effect snow is forecast across portions of the Great Lakes, in far northwest Pennsylvania and portions of western New York state. The weather service reported 16 inches of snow in Oswego, New York on New Year's Day.

Dinah Voyles Pulver, a national correspondent for USA TODAY, has covered climate change, weather and other news for decades. Reach her at dpulver@usatoday.com or @dinahvp on Bluesky or X or dinahvp.77 on Signal.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Coastal flooding in California, rare rain fell on Rose Bowl Parade

Coastal flooding and king tides in Northern California forecast

The new year is bringing warmer than normal temperatures across much of the U.S. including the Northern Rockies and Great...
China taxes condoms, contraceptive drugs in bid to spur birth rate

HONG KONG, Jan 2 (Reuters) - China removed a three-decade-old tax exemption on contraceptive drugs and ​devices from January 1 in new steps ‌to spur a flagging birth rate.

Condoms and contraceptive pills now ‌incur value-added tax of 13%, the standard rate for most consumer goods.

The move comes as Beijing struggles to boost birth rates in the world's second-largest economy. ⁠China's population fell ‌for a third consecutive year in 2024 and experts have cautioned the downturn will ‍continue.

China exempted childcare subsidies from personal income tax and rolled out an annual childcare subsidy last year, following ​a series of "fertility-friendly" measures in 2024, such as ‌urging colleges and universities to provide "love education" to portray marriage, love, fertility and family in a positive light.

Top leaders again pledged last month at the annual Central Economic Work Conference to promote "positive marriage and ⁠childbearing attitudes" to stabilise birth rates.

China's ​birth rates have been falling ​for decades as a result of the one-child policy China implemented from 1980 to ‍2015, and ⁠rapid urbanisation.

The high cost of childcare and education as well as job uncertainty and a slowing ⁠economy have also discouraged many young Chinese from getting ‌married and starting a family.

(Reporting by Clare Jim; ‌Editing by Kate Mayberry)

China taxes condoms, contraceptive drugs in bid to spur birth rate

HONG KONG, Jan 2 (Reuters) - China removed a three-decade-old tax exemption on contraceptive drugs and ​devices from Janu...
India approves electronic component projects worth $4.6 billion

Jan 2 (Reuters) - India has approved projects worth 418.63 billion rupees ($4.64 billion) from a ​host of companies to boost domestic manufacturing ‌of electronic components under an incentive scheme, the country's ‌IT ministry said on Friday.

Global majors Samsung Electronics, Tata Electronics and Foxconn were among the companies whose projects were approved to receive government subsidies ⁠under the Electronics ‌Component Manufacturing Scheme, which has an outlay of 229.19 billion rupees. The ‍projects include the manufacture of enclosures for mobile phones, camera sub-assemblies and other components.

India has been stepping up ​efforts to boost electronics manufacturing, launching a ‌series of incentive programs to attract global and domestic investors, expand local manufacturing capacity, reduce import dependence and strengthen supply chains across multiple sectors.

India's electronics manufacturing sector produced goods worth $125 billion ⁠in the year to March ​2025. The government hopes ​to increase this to $500 billion by fiscal 2031.

The projects approved on Friday are spread ‍across eight ⁠states and are expected to produce parts worth 2.58 trillion rupees ($28.62 billion), while employing ⁠about 34,000 individuals, according to the IT ministry..

($1 = 90.1440 ‌Indian rupees)

(Reporting by Nandan Mandayam in Bengaluru; ‌Editing by Harikrishnan Nair)

India approves electronic component projects worth $4.6 billion

Jan 2 (Reuters) - India has approved projects worth 418.63 billion rupees ($4.64 billion) from a ​host of companies to bo...

 

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